Pages

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

RAY BRADBURY, GREEN TOWN, ILLINOIS, AND NEW TENNIS SHOES – Pauline Fisk on the passing of a great writer

I’m not mourning Ray Bradbury, because I never knew him, not
like Margaret Atwood who wrote about him so movingly this weekend. No, I’m mourning that
boy who was sometimes called Douglas Spalding, sometimes Will Halloway,
sometimes Jim Nightshade, because that boy was my friend and now he’s gone, his
life like a leaf blown down a midnight street.

But Green Town, Illinois, still stands. Thank God for that. With its ravine, which scared me
witless first time I read about it, and its hero celebrating summer and new
tennis shoes, it’s alive and well.
All you have to do is open ‘Dandelion Wine’, or ‘Something Wicked This Way Comes’ or one of the other stories drawing on Bradbury’s childhood in
Waukegan, Illinois, in the 1920s, and there it is.

Over the last year or so I’ve been taking part in a
Goodreads debate, started by me, on whether ‘Farenheit 451’ or ‘Something
Wicked This Way Comes’ is Bradbury’s best book. In the course of
this debate I’ve been introduced to ‘The Halloween Tree’ and ‘From the Dust Returned’. Both have the power to fascinate, but for me they don’t match ‘Something Wicked.’ And they definitely
don’t match the short stories.

Would Bradbury get a look in if he were writing today? How
much shelf space would our booksellers – how much media space would our
publicists – afford him? And our
publishers, who can’t imagine how to market authors without tidy pigeon-holes –
how would they have dealt with a writer like Bradbury who created his own
pigeon-holes?

If you’ve never read Ray Bradbury, do so immediately and see
what I mean. And prepare to be inspired. Fiction’s a conversation. You read a story and, by means of your
own stories, find the way to join in. I’d never have written my first novel,
‘Midnight Blue’, for example, without ‘Something Wicked This Way Comes’. And how many other authors, I wonder,
owe a similar debt of gratitude - not just to Bradbury as story-teller but as
wordsmith too?

Bradbury always had a lot to say, but he always got it dead
right. ‘The ocean burned,’ he wrote in
the short story, ‘The Women’, in the celebrated anthology ‘I Sing the Body Electric.’ ‘A white phosphorescence stirred like a breath of steam
through the autumn morning sea, rising. Bubbles rose from the throat of some
hidden sea ravine. Like lightening
in the reversed green sky of the sea, it was aware. It was old and beautiful. Out
of the deeps it came, indolently. A shell, a wisp, a bubble, a weed, a glitter,
a whisper, a gill. Suspended in its depths were rainlike trees of frosted
coral, eyelike pips of yellow kelp, hairlike fluids of weed. Growing with the
tides, growing with the ages, collecting and hoarding and having unto itself
identities and ancient dusts, octopus-inks and all the trivia of the sea.’

See what I mean.

Lately I’ve come to appreciate a more pared-back style of
writing. When it comes to short stories, Raymond Carver’s my man. I love the
clean, clear lines of Annie Dillard, Marilyn Robinson and - newly discovered by
me - the wonderful American writer, Linda McCullough Moore.

When it comes to Bradbury, however, I’m a child again. His words come tumbling out and I’m
tumbling after them, seeing where they’ll take me, clinging on for the ride.
Another me - the editor me - might groan as gusting follows spinning, and whirling follows trembles, shudders and inhalations of a wind-sucking kind. But
the reader me would have it no other way. Nor would the writer me, who can’t
see a tattoo on an arm without wondering if it ever comes alive. Nor the explorer me, young again, tucked up in bed with
book and torch, waiting to see where Bradbury’s electricity will strike next.

But now something’s come to Green Town, Illinois, and taken
Ray Bradbury away. Some might say
it’s a rocket come to take him to the stars, or a train come to take him on a
midnight ride. But I say it’s tennis shoes that have taken Ray Bradbury - shoes
soled with marshmallows and woven of grass; new shoes, magic ones, and he’s
off, jumping over fences and sidewalks, dogs and houses, rivers and trees. And
it’s summertime where he’s heading.

10 comments:

Pauline, I have never read any Ray Bradbury but I've been meaning to for a bit and that is only confirmed by reading your wonderful post. Which book would you recommend as a starting point? I was thinking of Dandelion Wine?

Emma, 'Dandelion Wine' was my first. All the way through, I was saying yes, yes, yes, because Bradbury knew exactly what it felt like to be young. The anthologies are great too. Why not go for both? Short stories work for different occasions to novels. 'I Sing the Body Electric' or 'R is For Rocket'. 'The Martian Chronicles' too, though they're more episodic and on one theme, almost a novel in a way.

I understood intellectually in English lessons when my teachers talked about using words to create an effect, but Ray Bradbury was the first person to show me what that really meant. I'd been emotionally affected by narrative before I met his work, but his writing - the way he used words - touched me in a way I'd never encountered before, and for that I'll always be grateful.

And, Emma: yes, Dandelion Wine is wonderful, and would be a great starting point, but so too would Something Wicked This Way Comes, or The Silver Locusts (aka The Martian Chronicles, but a much better title!), or The Day It Rained Forever, or (for something a bit darker) The October Country, or...

If you're a writer yourself, you can't write or talk about the power of reading without it being about writing too. You can't read without wanting to write. It's like scratching an irresistible itch! You have to do it'd. And so I only have to remember my experiences as a young reader of Bradbury to find him setting me off again!